I stood in a park near my house the other day and watched people.
It was a normal scene. The new leaves of spring made the trees look green. The light came through in soft patches. People moved in both directions — talking, laughing, walking with purpose. Nothing about it would have caught anyone’s attention.
I was standing right in the middle of it.
I wasn’t pushed aside. Wasn’t ignored. Certainly wasn’t rejected.
But I didn’t feel part of the scene. I didn’t feel like those people. I somehow wasn’t one of them.
I could hear pieces of conversations as people walked past. I could tell who was relaxed and who was distracted and who was in a hurry. There was nothing unfamiliar about what I was seeing.
It felt like a scene that I was close enough to recognize, but not close enough to step into. I didn’t know how to belong there.
When I was younger, I would have reacted to that feeling differently. I would have felt some combination of frustration and anger. I would have assumed something needed to be fixed — either in me or in the world around me.
I would have tried to close the gap. I don’t feel that way anymore.

What if a key to knowing what to do is built into everybody’s gut?
Unconscious programming makes us eager to believe our own lies
I don’t regret my choices, but I do lament choices he refused to make
When you make your life choices, you also pick the consequences
We can see injustices of the past, but still honor men who achieved
China’s one-child policy: Unintended consequences on a grand scale
Shouldn’t standards be higher for those trusted to enforce our laws?
Objective reality has now become offensive in dysfunctional culture